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							Mostly the advice I get falls into two categories: neurotic pre-meds tell me anything after early june is late/application death sentence/how dare you even consider it; while advisors, physicians, admission folks tell me they often don't begin reviewing apps until august, so an app couldn't possibly be "late" until after that. However, Gonnif's advice above is on point. It may lead to overload trying to study for the test, build a competitive app, and finish up classes all at the same time. Personally, I hate free time and i'm a bit masochistic, so I have hope.
They don't start reviewing apps until August. But if your app isn't complete until August, then you'll be at the end of the queue when they start reviewing. Unless your app really stands out, the interview slots will all be getting handed out to earlier applicants while you're waiting for them to get around to reading yours. It could still work out for you, but you're not giving yourself the best chance of acceptance.
Applications are distributed for review by office staff. It is a first in, first out (FIFO) system except when they "skim the cream" by sorting the applications by something like MCAT score and preferentially reviewing all the MCAT >521 applicants and then FIFO. So yes, there is a queue although you can jump it if you have the right score.
That argument is based on the "queue" (what a funny word) being sorted/reviewed by order of submission, first to last. While that may be, I wonder if it really happens that way? "Dr. Johnson, put that application down! He submitted on July 1st, but we're only reviewing the last week of June today". Could be, I wouldn't know. I just know most businesses/offices/schools/humans-in-general are less organized than they profess to be.
I guess i'm just saying if you're in the giant pile of apps when they get started reviewing, you will be judged/compared/competing with/against everyone else in the pile. Date of submission doesn't sound like a metric often used to select potentially successful future physicians (again, if you're in the pile when they start, in my mind, you're competing against everyone else in the pile). Logic follows that everyone floating into the pile later will be at a disadvantage as II's begin going out, but until then I don't find the DOS argument to be bulletproof.
And of course my app will stand out, my mom has been telling me i'm a special snowflake for years.
Feel free to correct me, I'm just a pre-med bumping around in the dark.